Delaware Legal Terminology Reference: Key Terms Defined for Residents

Delaware's legal system operates within a distinct jurisdictional framework shaped by the state's own courts, statutes, and constitutional provisions. Professionals, litigants, and researchers working within that system routinely encounter technical vocabulary that carries precise meanings under Delaware law — meanings that sometimes diverge from general legal usage or from the law of other states. This reference covers the foundational terms used across Delaware civil, criminal, family, and corporate proceedings, organized by functional category and anchored to named courts, agencies, and statutory codes.

Definition and scope

Legal terminology in Delaware is governed by the interplay of three sources: the Delaware Code, court rules promulgated by the Delaware Supreme Court, and decisional law produced by the state's judiciary. The Delaware Supreme Court, as the court of last resort, issues Rules of Court that define procedural vocabulary binding on all inferior courts (Delaware Courts, Rules and Legislation).

Foundational terms in Delaware legal practice fall into four classification categories:

  1. Procedural terms — vocabulary describing how cases move through the court system (pleadings, motions, discovery, service of process, default judgment).
  2. Substantive terms — vocabulary describing legal rights and obligations (tort, contract, easement, fee simple, mens rea, strict liability).
  3. Jurisdictional terms — vocabulary describing which court or body has authority over a dispute (subject-matter jurisdiction, in personam jurisdiction, venue, standing, justiciability).
  4. Equitable terms — vocabulary specific to equity practice, heavily used in the Court of Chancery (injunction, specific performance, constructive trust, lis pendens, cy-pres).

The Court of Chancery, established under Article IV, Section 10 of the Delaware Constitution, handles equity matters and produces a significant share of the state's corporate and commercial legal vocabulary. Because more than 60% of Fortune 500 companies are incorporated in Delaware (Delaware Division of Corporations), the equitable and corporate terminology developed in that court has national and international significance.

For the broader regulatory structure that shapes how Delaware law operates alongside federal law, see the regulatory context for the Delaware legal system.

How it works

Legal terms in Delaware acquire enforceable meaning through three channels: statutory definition, court rule, and judicial construction.

Statutory definitions are authoritative where the Delaware General Assembly has enacted them. Title 6 of the Delaware Code defines contract-related terms under the Uniform Commercial Code as adopted by Delaware. Title 10 governs courts and judicial procedure. Title 11 defines criminal offenses and their elements, including the precise mental states — "intentionally," "knowingly," "recklessly," and "negligently" — that determine criminal liability under 11 Del. C. § 231.

Court rules extend definitional authority into procedure. The Delaware Superior Court Civil Rules, modeled on the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, define terms such as "pleading," "counterclaim," and "summary judgment" in ways that govern litigation practice across that court. The Court of Chancery operates under its own distinct Rules, reflecting its equity jurisdiction.

Judicial construction fills definitional gaps. When a term is ambiguous or undefined by statute, Delaware courts — particularly the Court of Chancery and the Supreme Court — issue opinions that become binding precedent. The doctrine of stare decisis requires inferior courts to follow those constructions.

The Delaware court system structure determines which court's definition controls for a given matter. A term construed in the Court of Chancery binds equity proceedings but does not automatically govern Superior Court litigation.

Common scenarios

Probate and estates

Terms such as "testator," "intestate succession," "letters testamentary," "personal representative," and "residuary estate" arise in proceedings before the Register of Wills, operating under Title 12 of the Delaware Code. Delaware has 3 counties — New Castle, Kent, and Sussex — each with a separate Register of Wills office. "Probate" in Delaware refers specifically to the judicial process of validating a will and authorizing administration of a decedent's estate. For further context, see Delaware probate and estates law.

Family court proceedings

The Delaware Family Court uses vocabulary governed by Title 13 of the Delaware Code. "Legal custody" and "physical custody" are distinct concepts: legal custody refers to decision-making authority over a child's welfare; physical custody refers to residential placement. "Residency jurisdiction" under the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA), as adopted in Delaware at 13 Del. C. § 1901 et seq., determines which state's courts may enter or modify custody orders. See Delaware family law: divorce and custody for procedural context.

Criminal proceedings

In criminal matters under Title 11, key terms include "indictment" (a formal charge issued by a grand jury), "information" (a charge filed directly by the Attorney General without grand jury action), "bail" (security for pre-trial release), and "nolle prosequi" (prosecutorial dismissal of a charge). The Delaware Department of Justice administers criminal prosecution statewide (Delaware Department of Justice). For term usage across the criminal process, see Delaware criminal justice process.

Corporate and chancery practice

Delaware's corporate law vocabulary — "fiduciary duty," "business judgment rule," "derivative action," "appraisal rights," "merger," "dissolution" — is drawn from the Delaware General Corporation Law (DGCL) at Title 8 of the Delaware Code. The Court of Chancery interprets these terms in disputes involving Delaware-chartered entities. Delaware incorporation and corporate law covers the structural context for those terms.

Decision boundaries

What this reference covers

This terminology reference applies to legal terms as used in Delaware state courts and under Delaware statutory law. It covers civil, criminal, family, equity, and corporate proceedings within the Delaware court system and before Delaware administrative agencies operating under Title 29 of the Delaware Code.

What falls outside scope

This reference does not cover:

Delaware is one of a small number of states maintaining a separate court of equity with distinct procedural vocabulary. A contrast that frequently generates confusion: damages is a legal remedy awarded by the Superior Court in monetary form; specific performance is an equitable remedy ordered by the Court of Chancery compelling a party to execute a contractual obligation. The two remedies are mutually exclusive in the same proceeding unless a court has concurrent jurisdiction. The Delaware Court of Chancery explained page addresses that jurisdictional line in greater depth.

When terminology questions arise within administrative agency proceedings — before bodies such as the Delaware Public Service Commission or the Division of Professional Regulation — the applicable definitions derive from the agency's enabling statute and the Delaware Administrative Procedures Act at 29 Del. C. § 10101 et seq. See Delaware administrative law and agencies for that regulatory layer.

An overview of how Delaware's legal structure fits within the broader U.S. legal framework — including the interaction between state and federal definitional authority — is available through the Delaware Legal Services Authority index.

References

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